Meet Alethea Kontis | #FriendlyFriday

It’s #FriendlyFriday, the day I tell you all about my fabulous friends and the brilliant things they’re up to. Have a fabulous friend of your own? Share a link to their awesomeness in the comments or on Twitter and Instagram using the hashtag.

Alethea is a prolific writer who has found a home in multiple genres: picture books, middle grade, YA, horror, fantasy, romance. The series she’s most well known for, the Woodcutter Sisters/Tales of Arilland, blends together dozens of different fairy tales and folk tropes into stories about sisters and princesses and fairies and queens and ordinary people caught up in extraordinary business. Though the books are aimed at middle grade and YA readers, they are complex in subject matter, language, structure, and execution. They also celebrate all the many ways of being a girl and a woman with no apologies given for any of those ways of being.

The way she engages with fairy and folk tales has always impressed me, because she’s not just skimming the surface, she’s delving deep into narratives that have always been about more than just whether or not the goose girl will win the heart of the prince or the mermaid will end up married or sea foam. Anyone who has read some of the older versions of these tales know that it’s not all sunshine and glass slippers; Alethea knows this, too.

And so her persona of Princess Alethea is somewhat about marketing–some authors ARE what they write, which is part of why people keep reading–and also somewhat about wanting to create an atmosphere around her that acknowledges both the shiny and the dark and embraces it with fierceness and glitter at the same time. You can’t be around Alethea and not appreciate that.

However, one cannot always be a 100% full on princess. Sometimes one must just be a regular old amazing person, which Alethea is. A person who wants people to feel welcome and loved and supported and energized and live up to their bestness. You can’t be around Alethea and not appreciate this part of her, either.

If you’re excited by the fairy/folk tale stuff, read The Unicorn Hunter, The Glass Mountain, or the whole Tales of Arilland short story collection. If you like those, then read the three Woodcutter Sisters books, Enchanted, Hero, and Dearest. These books are appropriate for everyone ages 8 and up.

If you want some adorable books for small kids, then get AlphaOops!: The Day Z Went First, and AlphaOops: H is for Halloween and Diary of a Mad Scientist Garden Gnome.

If horror is your thing, then grab a copy of Haven, Kansas and then Wild & Wishful, Dark & Dreaming.

If you’re a romance reader, then her Nocturne Falls books The Truth About Cats and Wolves and When Tinker Met Bell are the places to start.

I also highly suggest you support her on Patreon to get exclusive stuff and to help support her as she continues writing her wonderful books. Depending on the level of support you get videos–and trust me, you want videos so you can see for yourself the magicalness that is my dear friend.